I got an unexpected call from work yesterday (Sunday) which ended up with me doing about an hour and a half’s work. I got phone calls and emails on my BlackBerry, returned a couple of phone calls, went online on my home PC and connected to my work network, realised I needed some specific client software, booted up my work laptop and connected through to work…..
Basically wherever I am (and whenever) I can be contacted and gain connection to work. So this got me thinking on why firms (and law firms in particular) are so tied to working in the office, from Monday to Friday and from 9 to 5 (well that’s the supposed hours for support staff anyway). It makes no sense!
In IT specifically there is such a need to work outside the norm to avoid interrupting the business when doing system maintenance etc, isn’t it time we shifted to shift work or a more flexible working schedule? I’m sure for secretaries and other support staff a wider coverage in hours would be a big bonus for the lawyers.
Work has encroached so much into your private life (and as a consequence private life has encroached on work life, as you now sort out your private life on work time!), isn’t time to accept the fact and allow people to conduct their work whenever and from wherever?
Certainly there are some functions that do need to cover the 9 to 5, but ideally we’d love these to cover 7 to 8 or more. Anyway it’s as simple as managing your staff and ensuring a core set of hours are always covered adequately, isn’t it?
There’s plenty of evidence that suggests flexible/home working :
- reduces sick leave
- reduces commuting time
- saves money for the employer (power saved, overtime saved etc) and the employee (lunchtime sandwiches, coffees, cost of commute etc)
- gets more out of employees for the same time
I’d love to hear if your firm (especially law firms) have a widespread policy for home working or flexible working. Let me know in the comments.
If you’re interested in mobile working, have a look at moof.mobi. It’s a great blog on the subject (although Mr Moof has gone a little quiet of late).